"These [in Berea] were more fair-minded than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness, and searched the Scriptures daily to find out whether these things were so." - Acts 17:11
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(17) If someone has done you wrong, do not repay him with a wrong. Try to do what everyone considers to be good. (18) Do everything possible on your part to live in peace with everybody. (19) Never take revenge, my friends, but instead let God's anger do it. For the scripture says, "I will take revenge, I will pay back, says the Lord." (20) Instead, as the scripture says: "If your enemies are hungry, feed them; if they are thirsty, give them a drink; for by doing this you will make them burn with shame."

(8) Be under obligation to no one---the only obligation you have is to love one another. Whoever does this has obeyed the Law. (9) The commandments, "Do not commit adultery; do not commit murder; do not steal; do not desire what belongs to someone else"---all these, and any others besides, are summed up in the one command, "Love your neighbor as you love yourself." (10) If you love others, you will never do them wrong; to love, then, is to obey the whole Law.

(8) To conclude: you must all have the same attitude and the same feelings; love one another, and be kind and humble with one another. (9) Do not pay back evil with evil or cursing with cursing; instead, pay back with a blessing, because a blessing is what God promised to give you when he called you.

Good News Bible copyright © 1995 by American Bible Society.

Paul's counsel to the congregation in Rome (Romans 12:17-20; 13:8-10) is clearly in line with what Jesus taught. He insists that we must never allow vindictiveness, the desire to get even with someone for a suffered wrong, to drive us.

In the same vein, Peter taught that we must not repay evil with evil, insult with insult, but we must bless (I Peter 3:8-9). Why are we called to react this way? Because if we want to be in God's Kingdom, it can only happen without the spirit of murder dwelling in us, and those evil retaliations are the spirit of murder. We are not to take vengeance because God has retained that responsibility to Himself. Is that not the way it should be? Only He fully knows and understands every facet of the circumstances and can judge perfectly. By the way, Paul addresses the issue of retaliation four times in Romans 12, which begins by stating that we are to be living sacrifices and not to conform to this world's ways.

The picture should be clear. Somebody must be willing to do this if there will be peace. Jesus set the example: He, refusing to strike back, died for the entire world. Christ's non-retaliatory remedy is ultimately for everybody's benefit, but until He returns, the standards He set can be met and lived only by those who, like Jesus, have the Spirit of God, are living by faith, and are enabled to keep God's ways by God Himself.

— John W. Ritenbaugh

To learn more, see:
The Sixth Commandment



 

Topics:

Faith, Living By

Living by Faith

Living Sacrifice

Non-Retaliation

Retaliation

Revenge

Sacrifice, Living

Sixth Commandment

The Sixth Commandment

Vengeance

Vindictiveness




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